Motion Estimation for Optical Coherence Elastography Using Signal Phase and Intensity

19 Mar 2021  ·  Hossein Khodadadi, Orcun Goksel, Sabine Kling ·

Displacement estimation in optical coherence tomography (OCT) imaging is relevant for several potential applications, e.g. for optical coherence elastography (OCE) for corneal biomechanical characterization. Larger displacements may be resolved using correlation-based block matching techniques, which however are prone to signal de-correlation and imprecise at commonly desired sub-pixel resolutions. Phase-based tracking methods can estimate tiny sub-wavelength motion, but are not suitable for motion magnitudes larger than half the wavelength due to phase wrapping and the difficulty of any unwrapping due to noise. In this paper a robust OCT displacement estimation method is introduced by formulating tracking as an optimization problem that jointly penalizes intensity disparity, phase difference, and motion discontinuity. This is then solved using yynamic programming, utilizing both sub-wavelength-scale phase and pixel-scale intensity information from OCT imaging, while inherently seeking for the number of phase wraps. This allows for effectively tracking axial and lateral displacements, respectively, with sub-wavelength and pixel scale resolution. Results with tissue mimicking phantoms show that our proposed approach substantially outperforms conventional methods in terms of axial tracking precision, in particular for displacements exceeding half the imaging wavelength.

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